I am trying to build an error handler for my desktop application. The code Is in the class ZipCM.ErrorManager listed below.
What I am finding is that the outputted file is not giving me the correct info for the StackTrace.
Here is how I am trying to use it:
Try
'... Some stuff here!
Catch ex As Exception
Dim objErr As New ZipCM.ErrorManager
objErr.Except = ex
objErr.Stack = New System.Diagnostics.StackTrace(True)
objErr.Location = "Form: SelectSite (btn_SelectSite_Click)"
objErr.ParseError()
objErr = Nothing
End Try
Here is the class:
Imports System.IO
Namespace ZipCM
Public Class ErrorManager
Public Except As Exception
Public Location As String
Public Stack As System.Diagnostics.StackTrace
Public Sub ParseError()
Dim objFile As New StreamWriter(Common.BasePath & "error_" & FormatDateTime(DateTime.Today, DateFormat.ShortDate).ToString().Replace("\", "").Replace("/", "") & ".log", True)
With objFile
.WriteLine("-------------------------------------------------")
.WriteLine("-------------------------------------------------")
.WriteLine("An Error Occured At: " & DateTime.Now)
.WriteLine("-------------------------------------------------")
.WriteLine("LOCATION:")
.WriteLine(Location)
.WriteLine("-------------------------------------------------")
.WriteLine("FILENAME:")
.WriteLine(Stack.GetFrame(0).GetFileName())
.WriteLine("-------------------------------------------------")
.WriteLine("LINE NUMBER:")
.WriteLine(Stack.GetFrame(0).GetFileLineNumber())
.WriteLine("-------------------------------------------------")
.WriteLine("SOURCE:")
.WriteLine(Except.Source)
.WriteLine("-------------------------------------------------")
.WriteLine("MESSAGE:")
.WriteLine(Except.Message)
.WriteLine("-------------------------------------------------")
.WriteLine("DATA:")
.WriteLine(Except.Data.ToString())
End With
objFile.Close()
objFile = Nothing
End Sub
End Class
End Namespace
What is happenning is the .GetFileLineNumber() is getting the line number from objErr.Stack = New System.Diagnostics.StackTrace(True) inside my Try..Catch block. In fact, it’s the exact line number that is on.
Any thoughts of what is going on here, and how I can catch the real line number the error is occuring on?
Edit: Changed the code to account for the
Exception.StackTracebeing astringrather than a realStackTraceYou’re creating a new
StackTrace, so then it will be for the line you’re declaring it on, if you want the line number of the original exception, use the stack trace inException.StackTrace.I think you’re being a little confused, I can’t see why you create the new StackTrace at all?
Edit: Added more bits to the answer here since easier to see the syntax than in a comment
Currently you have the line
Which means that you’re creating a whole new stacktrace, starting when you’re creating it.
Instead change that line to:
Which will have the stacktrace from when the error actually happened.
Edit: Added complete sample: